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Related: Chronology: India-Pakistan
landmarks of war and peace
NEW DELHI, Sept. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- The foreign ministers of India and Pakistan
on Sunday began discussing new proposals aimed at resolving disputes like the
Kashmir issue that have resulted in decades of hostility.
Indian External Affairs Minister K. Natwar Singh and his Pakistani
counterpart Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri met in New Delhi, a day after their foreign
secretaries recommended that a dialogue initiated by the two sides this year
should be continued with a view to "further deepening and broadening" bilateral
engagement.
According to Indo-Asian News Service, the two foreign ministerswill hold
delegation-level talks Monday, the second and final day of their discussions,
following which the two governments are expected to issue a joint statement
indicating the roadmap for future dialogue.
A joint statement issued at the end of the talks between the two foreign
secretaries Saturday said they assessed "positively" the discussions held on the
eight subjects covered under the composite dialogue.
The subjects included Jammu and Kashmir, the military
standoff on Siachen, the Himalayan glacier that is the world's highest
battlefield, differences over navigation rights in a reservoir in Kashmir and
demarcation of the maritime boundary in a muddy estuary that separates Gujarat
from Pakistan's Sindh Province. Enditem |